Abstract

BackgroundNegative symptoms are a core feature of schizophrenia and also found in healthy individuals in subclinical forms. According to the current literature the two negative symptom domains, apathy and diminished expression may have different underlying neural mechanisms. Previous observations suggest that striatal dysfunction is associated with apathy in schizophrenia. However, it is unclear whether apathy is specifically related to ventral or dorsal striatal alterations. Here, we investigated striatal dysfunction in patients with schizophrenia and a non-clinical population, to determine whether it is a relevant neural correlate for apathy.MethodsChronic schizophrenia patients (n= 16) and healthy controls (n=23) underwent an event- related functional MRI, while performing a variant of the Monetary Incentive Delay Task. The two negative symptom domains were assessed in both groups using the Brief Negative Symptoms Scale.ResultsIn schizophrenia patients, we saw a strong negative correlation between apathy and ventral and dorsal striatal activation during reward anticipation. In contrast, there was no correlation with diminished expression. In healthy controls, global negative symptoms were correlated with decreased dorsal striatal activity.DiscussionThis study replicates our previous findings of a correlation between ventral striatal activity and apathy but not diminished expression in chronic schizophrenia patients. The association between apathy and reduced dorsal striatal activity suggests that impaired action-outcome selection is involved in the pathophysiology of motivational deficits. Finally, our findings in healthy controls support the idea that striatal alterations are a plausible neural correlate for negative symptoms in both a clinical and a subclinical context.

Highlights

  • The pre-TIPS study in 1994–95 showed that the duration of untreated psychosis (DUP) was long in our region with a mean value of 2.1 years, and median 26 weeks

  • The information campaigns and the early detection team were introduced in an early detection(ED) area (Rogaland county, Norway) comparing DUP with two usual-detection control sites in Oslo (Norway) and Roskilde (Denmark)

  • We investigated neural correlates to ultra-high risk (UHR) for psychosis in medication-naïve patients

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Summary

Background

Negative symptoms are a core feature of schizophrenia and found in healthy individuals in subclinical forms. Previous observations suggest that striatal dysfunction is associated with apathy in schizophrenia. It is unclear whether apathy is related to ventral or dorsal striatal alterations. Results: In schizophrenia patients, we saw a strong negative correlation between apathy and ventral and dorsal striatal activation during reward anticipation. Global negative symptoms were correlated with decreased dorsal striatal activity. Discussion: This study replicates our previous findings of a correlation between ventral striatal activity and apathy but not diminished expression in chronic schizophrenia patients. Our findings in healthy controls support the idea that striatal alterations are a plausible neural correlate for negative symptoms in both a clinical and a subclinical context. Cherrie Galletly*,1, Hannah Myles, Andrew Vincent, Nicholas Myles, Robert Adams, Madhu Chandratilleke, Dennis Liu, Jeremy Mercer, Andrew Vakulin, Gary Wittert

Abstracts for the Sixth Biennial SIRS Conference
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